Special Entrepreneurship Issue
HOW MANY TIMES HAVE I HEARD THE QUESTIONS:
●
Entrepreneurship is mostly about luck, isn’t it?
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Successful entrepreneurs are born, not made,
aren’t they?
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Isn’t entrepreneurship about being in the right
place at the right time with a product or service
that customers just happen to love?
Richard Branson and Virgin. Steve Jobs with Apple.
Bill Gates of Microsoft. Most people, I suspect,
credit their success to factors other than having
been “ taught” entrepreneurship. Surely, any selfrespecting entrepreneur will “ just go ahead and do it”
– not spend months or years studying the subject.
In short, the central question I’ve heard over and
over is simply: can entrepreneurship be taught?
Allow me to split a few hairs right away. If the
core question means, “ Can you teach someone to
be an entrepreneur?” the answer is “ Probably not.”
It takes healthy doses of motivation, persistence,
tolerance of ambiguity (and more) to be a
successful entrepreneur. Simply put, following an
entrepreneurial career path is not for everyone. But
if the question is whether we can better equip those
who choose to follow an entrepreneurial path – to
avoid at least some of the bumps, bruises and scars
that are sure to come – then there’s considerable
evidence that the answer is emphatically “ yes” ! In
this light, we can, indeed, teach entrepreneurship.
the first two steps in the entrepreneurial life cycle
are discovering an opportunity and assessing it .
Only then is it time for step three: crafting a
business plan.
With a solid plan in hand, it’s time for step four,
to gather the resources – the human and financial
capital and other resources (like suppliers, partners,
and so on) that it will take to give a nascent venture
a fighting chance for success. With the resources in
hand, and with the venture soon off the ground, the
next challenge, step five, is managing the growing
business, to nurse it to sufficient critical mass that
it can survive in the probably hotly competitive
industry it has entered. Finally, if all goes well, at
some point, the time may come to harvest any value
that’s been created and exit the business by selling
it, perhaps to a trade buyer, or floating it on a public
stock exchange.
Six steps. A neat educator’s model. But let’s be
candid: any six-step model (especially if it deals
with entrepreneurship) will always be more tortuous
than a simple diagram suggests. Here’s what I
recommend as a good approach for considering the
task of teaching aspiring entrepreneurs:
The Entrepreneurial Life Cycle
Discovering opportunities
More than a business plan
Assessing opportunities
Academics who considered teaching entrepreneurship
once thought that doing so amounted to teaching
students how to write a business plan. This was the
programme: give students a business planning
course, then have the students present their business
plans to a panel of investors, and – voila! – the job
is done. However, as students’ interest in studying
entrepreneurship grew in recent years, such a shortand-simple programme syllabus proved insufficient.
As the interest in entrepreneurship has grown, so has
the terrain that demands attention in any coherent
and comprehensive entrepreneurship curriculum.
The best way to begin thinking about our question
is to consider the life cycle of an entrepreneurial
venture. Entrepreneurship, it is said, is all about the
pursuit of opportunities without regard to the
resources one immediately has at his or her
disposal. Thus, the entrepreneurial journey begins
with the discovery of an opportunity that just might
be ripe for pursuit. Before raising money and
gathering other necessary resources, however, savvy
entrepreneurs give careful scrutiny to the
opportunity itself, ensuring themselves that the
opportunity stands a decent chance of survival and
that they won’t waste months or years of their lives
– not to mention their precious entrepreneurial
talent – chasing a fundamentally flawed idea. Thus,
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Business Strategy Review Winter 2006
Business planning
Gathering resources
Managing the growing business
Harvesting value
Discovering opportunities
Opportunities aren’t lying around like lost coins on
the pavement, waiting to be picked up by a random
passer-by. Not everyone would have seen the
opportunity that Tony Wheeler saw for Lonely
Planet, when growth in the number of intrepid
travellers suggested that travel guides to off-thebeaten-track destinations would provide the
foundation for a now-global travel publishing
business. Not everyone would have seen the unmet
demand that CelTel’s Terry Rhodes and Mo Ibrahim
saw for mobile telephones in Africa at a time when
per capita incomes suggested that African consumers
would not be able to afford mobile phones.
While it takes alertness to spot such
opportunities, I’ve discovered that there’s an
© 2006 The Author
| Journal compilation © 2006 London Business School
how to assess industry attractiveness (Michael
Porter’s five forces provide a useful framework for
doing so) and can learn what it takes to build
competitive advantage that’s sustainable over time
in order to keep would-be competitors at bay, at
least for a time.
The successful pursuit of opportunities involves
more than serving an attractive market and playing
a game in which one has competitive advantage,
Special Entrepreneurship Issue
abundance of research skills that can be learned by
would-be entrepreneurs to help them discover
opportunities that are right for them. From
ethnographic research skills of the kind that led to
the development of Zopa.com, the new online
financial services website that brings together
borrowers and lenders and cuts out the banker, to
interviewing skills, to techniques for digging into
the mind of the customer, there’s an abundance of
Six steps. A neat educator’s model. But let’s be candid: any
six-step model (especially if it deals with entrepreneurship)
will always be more tortuous than a simple diagram suggests.
skills that can be learned to help anyone looking for
the right opportunity do the discovery job better.
Assessing opportunities
Discovering an opportunity is just the first step,
however, and many ideas that arise are just that:
ideas, but not really opportunities. Assessing
opportunities involves taking a disciplined look along
three lines of inquiry: market, industry, and team .
All else being equal, most entrepreneurs prefer
opportunities that are supported by favourable
trends (demographic, social, technological, or
whatever) and that serve a market that’s large and
growing or that has the potential to grow. In such
markets, there’s a chance that more than one
entrant can thrive. Rising disposable incomes and
the increasingly time-pressured lives that many of
us lead today have provided fertile ground for the
development of more upscale coffee bar chains –
Starbucks, Coffee Republic, and others – than
anyone could have imagined a decade ago.
But large and growing markets are not really
sufficient – perhaps not even necessary. Be it a new
good or service, what matters more is whether what
the business offers is something that customers will
be willing to buy. Better yet, it’s always a good omen
when a new offer addresses some serious customer
pain in an identifiable and accessible target market.
Learning where to find data on macro trends and
market attractiveness – and how to interpret it – and
finding out the best ways to gain insight into
customer needs are key elements on the learning
agenda for any entrepreneur.
Serving an attractive market with a product
customers want to buy is helpful, to be sure. Yet it’s
uncanny how many novice entrepreneurs actually
believe that, even after studying the marketplace,
their new market offering “ will have no
competition” . Such thinking is naïve. Most markets
are served by a number of industries, some of which
are brutally competitive. Entrepreneurs can learn
© 2006 The Author
though. The reality is that most entrepreneurs’
“ Plan A” isn’t what usually works, so assembling an
entrepreneurial team that can lead the business
through the inevitable brick walls the business will
face (or hit) is also crucial. Managing difficult and
uncertain transitions is essential for entrepreneurs.
Thus, would-be entrepreneurs should learn how to
think about the team it will take to pursue a particular
opportunity and how to attract and keep team talent.
Business planning
The plethora of books, websites, and other resources
devoted to business planning suggest that there’s
much that can be learned about business planning.
And there is. Interestingly, though, some observers
say that most business plans should never have
been written, for they are based on fundamentally
flawed ideas that are unlikely to fly – and even more
unlikely to raise investment capital. Indeed, many
successful entrepreneurs never really write a
business plan, at least not formally. Once they’ve
assessed their opportunities, they simply get started,
perhaps conducting small experiments to tease out
the various uncertainties they’ve identified that
could stand in the way of their ultimate success.
For those who need to raise capital, however, a
business plan, at least in some form, is often
necessary. With all that’s been written about
business planning, perhaps the most useful thing
we can now teach about business planning is how
not to write a business plan. We have identified at
least six common varieties of business plans that
are likely to go straight into the financier’s dustbin:
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The “ Me-First” business plan
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The “ We Have No Competition” business plan
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The “ Coke for Every Kid in China” business plan
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The “ No Economic Viability” business plan
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The “ No Credible Team” business plan
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The “ Everything Is Wonderful” business plan
| Journal compilation © 2006 London Business School
Business Strategy Review Winter 2006
→
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→ While space here does not permit a detailed
Special Entrepreneurship Issue
examination of each of these types, their titles make
their salient characteristics self-evident. In short,
just as travel guides suggest routes through a
mountain range that will take more time to traverse
than a tourist has, it is helpful to entrepreneurs to
find out, fast, what kind of business plans will get
them absolutely nowhere.
products or new ones? Managing a growing business
involves managing cash, too; for an unpleasant
surprise that most high-growth entrepreneurs
confront is that rapid growth does not usually
generate cash, it consumes it. Tools and frameworks
have been developed to help entrepreneurs deal
with these and other challenges entailed in running
a growing business, and their timely application can
save a still-fragile business from going bust.
Gathering resources
Gathering resources for a start-up venture or a
growing business is fraught with complex and multidimensional tasks. Entrepreneurial ventures need
all sorts of resources: people, money, partners and
collaborators, suppliers, and so on. There’s much
that can be learned from entrepreneurs who have
successfully tackled these tasks.
Take finance, for example. All the questions can
make you intellectually and emotionally dizzy.
Where should one look? Family and friends?
Banks? Business angels? Venture capital firms?
Which backer’s risk-reward ratios are most
attractive? What’s the business worth, now and
later? Should I seek to raise debt or equity? What
do all the terms in a shareholders’ agreement
mean – anti-dilution provisions, tag-along and
drag-along rights, ordinary and preference shares,
and so on – and must I accept them? Can I obtain
the cash I need from customers or suppliers, so I
don’t need a financier at all?
Answers to all these questions can be learned in the
school of hard knocks or learned in advance from
the experiences of others who already have walked
the entrepreneurial path.
Managing the growing business
Any entrepreneur knows that managing a rapidly
growing business is a different cup of tea from
managing a stable one that’s likely to be pretty
much the same tomorrow as it is today. Here, too,
there are lessons that can be learned.
Most young ventures pass through a number of
predictable stages as they grow. The nature of the
managerial challenge differs from stage to stage.
Entrepreneurship, in its early stages, is largely
about doing, as the entrepreneur must do almost
everything, given the typically scarce resources at
his or her disposal. In later stages the managerial
task changes to one of managing, but knowing when
and how to make this transition is not always obvious.
Understanding the growth models that academics
have developed can provide useful guidance.
Managing growth also involves identifying and
surmounting the inevitable barriers to growth, many
of which are predictable. It involves choices about
which markets to serve. Should we seek to grow in
existing markets or new ones? With existing
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Business Strategy Review Winter 2006
Harvesting value
Some entrepreneurs choose to run their businesses
for a lifetime, for the sheer joy of determining their
own destiny or to avoid the stifling and bureaucratic
environment found in some larger, long-established
businesses that grow only at a snail’s pace, if they
grow at all. Others, however, prefer to build value in
their ventures and then harvest that value through a
sale of the business or through listing the business
so that public shareholders can participate in its
fortunes. The recent sale of Skype, the voice-overInternet-protocol telephony provider, to eBay
harvested billions of value that the Skype team had
created. In late 2006, the Internet phenomenon
Facebook was on the market, and its founder, Mark
Zuckerberg (and his top management team) had
many questions to answer before deciding whether
to sell his business and to whom. Here, too, there’s
much to be learned.
How can I get best price? What about timing?
Should I sell or should I float? If I sell, should I
take someone else’s stock or insist on cash? What
are the implications of being a listed company?
Do I want thousands of shareholders and dozens
of analysts peering over my shoulders and poring
over my results each and every quarter?
These and other questions can be addressed by
studying companies that have previously trodden
these paths. Their answers can have material effect
on the value that the entrepreneur and his or her
early financiers can take to the bank as the harvest
plays out.
The path loops back
It’s easy to draw a flow chart of the entrepreneurial
life cycle, but it’s much harder to actually travel it,
for the path keeps looping back on itself, even
skipping a stage or two if things develop more
quickly than expected. The reality is that
discovering an attractive opportunity probably won’t
happen on the first attempt. Assessing it may
involve reshaping it and assessing it once more, or
even abandoning it and looking for another.
Business plans are living, breathing documents that
change continuously, as market and competitive
forces offer up new information and new challenges.
Gathering resources never ends, nor do the
© 2006 The Author
| Journal compilation © 2006 London Business School
travelled the entrepreneurial path before.
Learning the art and craft of entrepreneurship is
important not simply for the enhancement of one’s
own entrepreneurial outcomes. An abundant body of
research makes clear that robust entrepreneurial
climates are intimately linked to economic
development, whether in emerging economies or in
highly developed ones. Most of today’s new jobs are
created not by large, stable multinationals, but by
high growth “ gazelles” , entrepreneurial companies
that grow rapidly, creating new jobs in their wake.
Thus, the art and craft of entrepreneurship is a
noble endeavour, one worth doing well. We’re
fortunate, indeed, that in this sense we can teach
entrepreneurship. ■
The art and craft of entrepreneurship
Dorothy Leonard and Jeffrey F. Rayport, “ Spark
Innovation through Empathic Design” , Harvard
Business Review, November 1997.
We’ve found that a good way for entrepreneurs –
whether MBA students on the London Business
School campus or executives running high-growth
entrepreneurial businesses – to learn is by
assembling a toolkit, a set of models and
frameworks with which to address the sometimes
daunting intellectual challenges that
entrepreneurial decision making will require as their
venture passes through the various stages in the
entrepreneurial life cycle. We then ask them to
apply these tools to case studies of real-world
entrepreneurs. In these case studies, we tell the
story – half a story, actually – of a difficult decision
that a real-life entrepreneur actually faced.
The story stops just at the point where the
entrepreneur has the data – incomplete though it
may be – at hand to make the decision. It’s the
students’ job to wrestle with the decision, just as
the entrepreneur under study had to do. Should I
buy or sell? Develop a new product or enter a new
market? Float now or wait? By learning the tools and
applying them to real entrepreneurial decisions, the
entrepreneur-to-be develops ways of dealing with
the likely challenges he or she will face, sooner or
later. Perhaps more importantly, he or she sees –
and may be inspired by – role models who have
Special Entrepreneurship Issue
challenges of managing growth. When value is
harvested, the entrepreneur may remain on board to
generate further value in the future.
Thus part of learning about entrepreneurship is
about learning whether entrepreneurship is right for
you. The entrepreneurial path is marked by rampant
ambiguity. Which customers should we target?
Should the product be like this or like that? Will my
people and products really deliver? How will
competitors react? The challenges never end. Not
everyone likes, or is comfortable with, waking up in
the morning and finding that the day will not go as
planned the night before. Thus, learning about the
entrepreneurial path – and whether it suits one’s
own personality, ambitions, and capabilities – is a
worthwhile endeavour regardless of the outcome.
Resources
John W. Mullins, The New Business Road Test , 2nd
Edition, Prentice-Hall/FT, 2006.
Michael E. Porter, Competitive Strategy, Free Press,
1980.
Richard Stutely, The Definitive Business Plan, 2nd
Edition, Prentice-Hall/FT, 2002.
Business Plan Services, http://www.bizplans.co.uk
Bob Zider, “ How Venture Capital Works” , Harvard
Business Review, November 1998.
Neil C. Churchill and Virginia Lewis, “ The Five
Stages of Small Business Growth” , Harvard
Business Review, May 1983.
Larry E. Greiner, “ Evolution and Revolution as
Organizations Grow” , Harvard Business Review, May
1998.
Neil C. Churchill and John W. Mullins, “ How Fast
Can Your Company Afford to Grow” , Harvard
Business Review, May 2001.
London Business School’s Entrepreneurship Summer
School, http://www.london.edu/summer_school
Global Entrepreneurship Monitor,
http://www.gemconsortium.org
John Mullins (jmullins@london.edu) is Associate Professor of Management Practice and chairs the
entrepreneurship faculty at London Business School. He is the author of The New Business Road Test:
What Entrepreneurs and Executives Should Do Before Writing a Business Plan.
London Business School
Regent’s Park
London NW1 4SA
United Kingdom
Tel +44 (0)20 7000 7000
Fax +44 (0)20 7000 7001
www.london.edu
A Graduate School of the University of London
© 2006 The Author
| Journal compilation © 2006 London Business School
Business Strategy Review Winter 2006
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